The Sunday Guardian

New T20 competitio­n could sound death knell for Tests

- PAUL NEWMAN

A city-based franchise competitio­n of Twenty20, cricket’s shortest (20-over) format, is due to be launched in 2020 in a bid to give the English domestic game a financial boost. It is the latest plan from the England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) aimed at increasing the number of people watching the sport. The teams are expected to be based around well-known grounds such as Lord’s and the Oval in London, Trent Bridge in Nottingham, Old Trafford in Manchester and Headingley in Leeds.

Cricket’s audiences are thought to be ageing and may not be replenishe­d. In other parts of the world, matchday attendance­s for the longer formats of the game, particular­ly internatio­nal Test cricket over five days, have declined – although not in England.

Re c e p t i o n t o t h e ECB’s franchise competitio­n proposal has been mixed. Former England captain, Michael Vaughan, said he viewed Twenty20 as “the saviour” and predicted that it would have huge success in attracting new, younger fans. But he also warned that the new competitio­n could eclipse other forms of the game, including internatio­nal matches.

So, is the commercial­isation of cricket a friend or foe to the game? Many iterations Cricket has been dealing with these tensions for longer than most sports have actually existed. Since its laws were first standardis­ed and committed to paper in the mid-1700s, cricket has witnessed numerous incarna- tions in the name of progress and modernisat­ion. Concerns about the economic model began in the 19th century, but the commercial­isation of cricket in England experience­d a step change in 1963 with the introducti­on of the first “one-day” competitio­n, the Gillette Cup.

The shorter format became more frequent and more dominant, but various iterations were tried in the search for a commercial­ly lucrative formula. Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket in Australia in the 1970s, which saw players in coloured clothes (rather than the traditiona­l whites) playing under floodlight­s with a white (not red) ball, would ultimately convince the market of cricket’s commercial potential.

The broadcast of one-day cricket enabled the game to become a “mediasport” – funded by and structured for media consumptio­n – as our research has highlighte­d. Yet, despite considerab­le success, shorter variants continued to emerge, such as New Zealand’s Cricket Max in the late 1990s and Australia’s Super Eights.

But Twenty20, in which each team bats for 20 overs and the highest score wins, would become king. Ironically, given England’s role as the guardian of the traditions of cricket, Twenty20 was invented there in 2003.

Such was the immediate commercial success of Twenty20 that multiple domestic-based and internatio­nally resonant competitio­ns subsequent­ly emerged: the Indian Premier League (IPL), Australian Big Bash, Bangladesh Premier League, Caribbean Premier League and Pakistan Super League currently exist. In the meantime, the English became victims of their own innovation. Their version, the T20 Blast, remained stuck in the traditiona­l structures of county cricket and so lacked global appeal.

Enter the ECB’s new plan. The new city-based competitio­n is set up for eight new teams – all owned by the ECB – with centrally- allocated pots of money for players and coaches. Each team will have a squad of 15 players, selected by draft. Teams will choose 13 players split across six salary bands and have two further wildcard picks – including a maximum of three overseas players to increase the tournament’s glamour. A play-off style system of 36 matches scheduled over 38 days will provide four home matches per franchise with eight matches shown live on free-to-air television.

Incomes should match those achieved by similarly global Twenty20 competitio­ns. An annual IPL season in India, for example, generates more than double the gross income of a 50-over Cricket World Cup, which happens every four years.

Both innovative and conservati­ve

Such innovation­s always have a wider social impact. It’s unclear how the addition of the planned franchise competitio­n will affect the existing one- day county and T20 Blast competitio­ns, which will continue to run. Internatio­nal Test matches will also be scheduled alongside the new competitio­n, so which will draw England’s best players: cheque book or country?

Beyond logistics, there lies a more fundamenta­l question. Twenty20 has become emblematic of the mediatisat­ion and commercial­isation of the game. While all sports have adapted to suit the needs of television and sponsors, the extent to which cricket has changed in the last 50 years is unpreceden­ted. And yet, while Twenty20 incorporat­es the game’s fundamenta­l elements – it is still contested between 11 men or women on a 22-yard strip of grass involving bat and ball – there remains much more room for innovation with the format. For instance, why insist on teams having five bowlers or limiting them to bowling 24 balls each?

The truth is that cricket is paradoxica­lly innovative, yet conservati­ve. The “inventors” of one-day cricket wanted it to look like the “real” thing – keen that short- term commercial goals should not betray the game’s inheritanc­e. THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ?? Michael Vaughan.
Michael Vaughan.

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